Posts Tagged ‘Yorkshire’

Digital Storytelling Workshops for Engineers

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009
Digital Storytelling

Digital Storytelling

Ingenious Workshops

The first workshops funded by the Ingenious Fund of the Royal Society of Engineering have been scheduled.

The first is for Railway Engineers at the National Railway Museum in York. The digital storytelling workshop will be held at the museum on three Wednesdays. February 4th & 11th with a final day on March 4th.

The workshop is free and open to professional railway engineers with a story to tell. It’s hoped the stories will raise public awareness of the work of engineers and inspire a new generation of professionals to consider the career. Download a flyer here.

The second is for Broadcast Engineers at the National Media Museum in Bradford on three Mondays. February 9th, 16th and 23rd.

The third is to be held in Southampton on March 31st, April 21st &28th. More details soon.

The completed stories will be displayed at Science and Engineering Fairs  and considered by the BBC for publication on their websites.

I am running these workshops in partnership with the University of Salford and the University of Southampton.

For more details and a booking form contact Dr Zoe Stec. L.Z.Stec@salford.ac.uk

Something borrowed, something green …

Monday, April 14th, 2008

This story was inspired by a car key fob from the magic story bag

I borrowed a hundred pounds from my grandma to buy my first car. I don’t know why she was so willing to lend it to me. Perhaps, to her, it wasn’t a lot of money. For me it was a fortune – in 1968 my monthly take home pay at the BBC was £39/12s/0d (£39.60).

I looked in the Yorkshire Post for the car ads. I wanted to buy from a garage – in that way I would know it had been serviced and prepared for sale.

Ford PrefectAt the wheel of a green Ford Prefect I drove carefully out of Bracken Edge Garage in Leeds. They had my £100.00, I had my car. It had been a year since passing my test and I’d driven very little since. Until now I had hitch hiked everywhere. Nervously I pulled out into the city centre traffic.

In the middle of a main road, the car coughed and stalled. Four lanes of traffic and one traffic jam piled up behind a green Ford Prefect.

I tried everything but the car wouldn’t start. I found a phone box and called the garage I’d left only minutes earlier. They towed me in and found a fuel blockage in the carburettor and the remains of an old rag in the petrol tank.

Two hours later I pulled out again into the same street – this time the car took me all the way home to Huddersfield.

Years later The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy immortalised the name “Ford Prefect”, but my hitchhiking days came to an end the day I spent my grandmother’s £100 on my own car.

Family clears home at cliff site

Saturday, April 12th, 2008

BBC North Yorkshire | Family clears home at cliff site

Erosion affecting homes in YorkshireA second family has had to move belongings from their home which is teetering on the edge of a landslip at Cayton Bay in North Yorkshire.

Thousands of tonnes of earth have slipped away in front of a number of homes leaving them on a cliff edge.

Stories like this remind me of a haunting digital story made by Lyz Turner on the BBC Telling Lives project. It was one of our first workshops, held in Hornsea on the Yorkshire Coast some miles south of Cayton Bay. You can watch the film here:

Eroded by the sea

Eroding lives – a Digital Story by Lyz Turner